📢 Exclusive on Gate Square — #PROVE Creative Contest# is Now Live!
CandyDrop × Succinct (PROVE) — Trade to share 200,000 PROVE 👉 https://www.gate.com/announcements/article/46469
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🎁 Endless creativity · Rewards keep coming — Post to share 300 PROVE!
📅 Event PeriodAugust 12, 2025, 04:00 – August 17, 2025, 16:00 UTC
📌 How to Participate
1.Publish original content on Gate Square related to PROVE or the above activities (minimum 100 words; any format: analysis, tutorial, creativ
The trading market is full of uncertainties; why do so many people still like or even love this industry?
Because for ordinary people, trading is the place where wealth is most recently acquired.
And the difficulty of trading has not intensified with the recession of economic growth and the entrenchment of social classes.
Ten years ago, twenty years ago, fifty years ago, trading was this difficult, and it remains this difficult now. Meanwhile, the vast majority of other industries in this society have declined due to the economic downturn in recent years. Industries rise and fall, each taking the spotlight for three to five years, and too many industries have already disappeared into history. For ordinary people, making money in most industries is much harder than it used to be.
It is said that with high-performance computers and AI large models, all one needs to do is to compete in computing power and talent, and institutions should have long since wiped out ordinary people and unified the industry, right? Yet, that’s not the case. Even with the strongest computers and the best PhDs in mathematics and computer science, institutions still find it no easier to make money, and there's not much more profit to be gained.
Transitioning to another industry is unimaginable.
The difficulty of trading is relatively stable, and whether it's a connected person or an ordinary individual, the difficulty is the same for everyone. One would think that when the economic situation is good and making money is easier, trading would also be easier to profit from, right? But that's not the case; regardless of whether the economic situation is good or bad, trading is equally difficult for everyone.
Even for institutions with relatively large amounts of capital, the difficulty is much greater than for individuals. Many strategies that individuals can adopt cannot be used by institutions, which in turn makes it a rare form of fairness for ordinary people.
In other industries, you don't even have the qualifications to compete with those who have connections.